“…Some of these characteristics are more or less conspicuous depending on the phylogeny: in Opuntioideae and Cactoideae, two of the most recently derived subfamilies with a predominance of succulent forms, diverse wood configurations have been reported (cambial variants sensu ; Carlquist, 2001 ). These varies from monomorphic woods, with predominance of just one cell type, to polymorphic woods where similar proportions of more than one cell type, or alternatively, several changes in the predominant cell types occur (Mauseth and Plemons, 1995 ; Terrazas and Arias, 2002 ; Mauseth, 2006 ; Vázquez-Sánchez and Terrazas, 2011 ; Reyes-Rivera et al, 2017 ). In addition, there are species where the fibers, typical wood elements in woody dicots, are scarce or absent, instead occur an abundance of a very specialized cell type with limited extension of the secondary cell wall, called wide-band tracheid (WBT, Figure 1 ).…”